The Real Meaning of Christmas Lights

As fall moves onward toward winter, we have places to go, things to do, people to meet. Yet as we go about our business, we notice the days are getting shorter. Sweaters come out of storage, we close the windows, and turn on the heat.

Advent is a season where we stop and remember that the light of this world is waning in more ways than one, that the world as we know it is passing away.

The word "secular" comes from the Latin word for this present world with its priorities — getting a job, paying the bills, finding a mate. Politics, economics, entertainment, sports are all realities of the secular world. "Secularism" is the modern program that insists that this is all that there is. A version popular in America says that there may be more to life than this, but it is entirely a private affair that you may not talk about in public. God, higher values, heaven, are all out-of- bounds topics in school, politics, and the news media.

The agenda of secularism would have us live under the illusion that things will always be the way they are. There may be ups and downs in the economy, but it will keep humming along. Elections may change the office holders, but the government will just keep on keeping on. That's the way people thought in Noah's day. But then the flood came (Matt 24:37-44).

St. Paul calls this attitude being asleep (Rom 13:11-14). God, breaking into space and time in a manger in Bethlehem, changed things forever. The central moment of human history has come and gone; we're in the end game now. The things that now seem so real, so ultimate, will come to a crashing halt.

For many of us in December, the bleak light injects a dose of melancholy into our dispositions. But then we remember that "the holidays" are coming — there is something to look forward to! We string lights on our shrubs and put candles in our windows to cheer ourselves up and thumb our noses at the darkness.

For Christians, these lights have a deeper meaning. The night is far spent, the day is at hand. At the moment when the darkness of human society is at its deepest, the Light of the World will come.

So is it a waste of our time to get educated and employed? Should we just spend our days praying, reading the Bible, and trying to predict dates for the Return of the King?

St. Paul sharply rebuked some for taking this approach. As focused as Paul was on the age to come, he was thoroughly engaged in this one. Besides his profound life of prayer and preaching, he labored with his hands to the point of exhaustion so as not be a burden on anyone, and have something to give to the needy. He said that those that refuse to work should not eat (2 Thess 3:6-13). The Second Vatican Council said that living for the future world should make us more, not less, committed to improving this one (Gaudium et Spes 37).

Besides, the Lord clearly says that His Second and final coming will be at the time we least expect it (Matt 24:44). If God is purposely designing it to be a surprise, I don't think there is much hope of outsmarting Him.

So what do we do about His Coming? Very simple. By the power of His grace, let's make sure that when the Light arrives it won't for us be a cruel light. Are there things in your life that you'd rather not be seen by God and everyone else? Then you'd best get busy rooting them out of your life. Because the Light will reveal all.

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A Catholic priest has made a prediction on the Second Coming of Christ. I assure you this is nothing like a crazed evangelical pastor's ranting. It's a thought provoking postulate. Read more at Jesus' Second Coming.

Guest

Thanks for the link.

We are "fighting" the constant requests of our children to put up the Christmas tree. I tell them "Wait" just like we have to wait for Jesus to come again. Next week, the small stable will come out and a few animals. The third week of Advent, we also put the tree up, and Jesus and Mary show up in the stable. The shepherds are placed on top of the armoire that is about 10 feet away from the stable. They are looking in that direction, but they are not there. The 3 wise men are clear across the room (on top of the book shelf). Over the 3 weeks from the 3rd week of Advent to the Epiphany, they slowly make their way around the room toward the stable. Of course, baby Jesus is placed in the stable the night of Christmas Eve when the children are in bed. A few days later, the shephers come…and finally the 3 wise men make it all the way to the stable as well. It's an enjoyable tradition in our home, and I never hesitate to remind them of the real reason they have to "wait".

Guest

I like your tradition!

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